Nobody I know prices it that way . I always call 2-3 Drywallers and at least 2 Tapers, and get estimates. Saves a lot of discussion later. Then I always expect them to ask for about 10 % more . Sometimes worth it, sometimes not.
No. The lineal footage may be in the form of any shape: a circle, ellipse, triangle, quadrilateral, another polygon or any irregular random closed shape. Unless you have more information, your question is unanswerable.
You can't. Lineal footage measures length. Tonnage measures weight. There is no relationship for conversion
The circumference of such a circle is 97.5 ft.
The answer depends on the width of the decking.
Actually no. The term LINEAL refers to ancestry or heredity so a lineal foot would refer to someone's left or right foot that is related to you. In the construction and other industries "lineal" is commonly misused and thought of as the same as LINEAR although it is definitely NOT the same thing. One (1) linear foot equals (12) inches.
There are different types of drywall. Green rock for wet areas in bathrooms. Exterior grade 'rock for porch ceilings. 5/8" X is used for garages. There could be endless floorplan variations which will affect how many lineal feet of wall space you have. You could have several different ceiling heights which will affect your material square footage. Your going to have to do the math on this one or take it to a professional.
None, since there can be no conversion.A linear (or lineal) foot is a measure of length in 1-dimensional space. An acre is a measure of area in 2-dimensional space. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at conversion from one to the other is fundamentally flawed.
A lineal foot is is one foot along the ground. A 12" ruler is a lineal foot.
It is ft. Lineal is not necessary.
Lineal feet are units for measuring lengths.
The population of Ciudad Lineal is 228,171.
147.63